Conclusion: Know What You're Using it For

AZZA's Silentium offers some of the best acoustic padding I've ever seen on a case. With our stock testbed, the Silentium proves to be one of the quietest cases I've ever tested while offering middling thermal performance. If you're going to run your hardware at stock and you just want to muffle the noise, the AZZA Silentium is definitely worth considering.

I like a lot of what AZZA has done with the exterior of the Silentium, specifically the flip-down door for the optical drive bay that allows you to leave the front door of the case closed. Venting is also well hidden by the extruded fan intake at the bottom of the face. The case also winds up being much more spacious than it looks due to the extruded side panels and soft acoustic foam.

Where the Silentium runs into trouble is both a messy interior design (due to the wasted motherboard headers and the lack of a routing hole for the exhaust fan header and AUX 12V line) and, more seriously, with competing case designs on the market. At the same price, I like the BitFenix Ghost better. It has a similarly attractive design (if a bit chintzy looking in places, just like the AZZA), but is more feature rich and has better expandability. Closed loop coolers are often a good choice for users who want quiet, efficient CPU cooling, and the Silentium only allows for a 120mm radiator while the Ghost, Fractal Design Define R4, and Nanoxia Deep Silence 1 offer much more in the way of options.

Unfortunately the last two make things even more complicated. If the DS1 never makes a successful landing on US shores, the Silentium and Ghost both still have to contend with the Fractal Design Define R4. At $10 more, the R4 is a better built and better looking case, and it offers an integrated fan controller which is useful for tuning fan performance to exactly where you need it. Of course, if the DS1 does make it to the States at $119, it will land like an atom bomb and wipe out the majority of competing cases within $40 of it in either direction.

There's a place in the world for the AZZA Silentium, but it pretty desperately needs a price cut. This case feels like it belongs at $79 (which is incidentally where it resides with rebate at the time of this writing), where its shortcomings are easier to forgive and it's out of striking distance of the competition. At $79, the Silentium is one the least expensive quiet cases you can buy, and has a strong value offering that makes it a stronger competitor to cases like the Ghost and R4. If you see it for that price and it suits your needs, it's certainly worth the recommendation, but at $99 I'd shell out the extra bread for an R4 or DS1.

Noise and Thermal Testing, Overclocked
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  • The Von Matrices - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    Are all the pictures broken or has my browser gone crazy?
  • csroc - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    broken for me too unfortunately
  • karasaj - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    happened to me too, so I doubt it.
  • colinstu - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    kinda pointless without the pictures!
  • Dustin Sklavos - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    Our server was hosed, should be up with pictures now.
  • pcfxer - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    What? No platter drives? I'm still trying to find a high quality "silent" case that is sharp, has more than just silicone drive mounts and isn't the SOLO or SOLO II.
  • jimmyzaas - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    Exactly, there should at least be one hard disk in there. I personally know many people have at least one hdd in their system. Just because they want it quiet, does not mean they want to sacrifice storage capacity. It's a shame no one else is doing suspension mounts like the Solo.

    Temps of SSDs are kinda silly. They don't even get that hot anyway. HDD temps would have been a better measure of storage cooling, which often gets neglected in these quiet cases.
  • hmaarrfk - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    Seriously :|, how is only having a 1 USB 3.0 port at the front allowed for a case that cost $100. The review should have stopped there and declared the case as a "do not buy".
  • ShieTar - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    Why? Personally, I have yet to find a usefull application for even a single USB 3 port, as I don't transport data on physical media but rather just through network connections. And nothing else I connect to USB, like keyboard, mouse, printer, WLAN-Stick utilizes USB 3. Or needs to be connected to the front of the case.

    I also buitl 4 PCs for friends and colleagues the last year, and none of them had any USB-3 devices beyond external harddrives, and nobody ever mentioned he wants to connect two of those at the same time. So, I don't think a lot of people have any kind of interest in a second front USB-3 port.

    As an engineer I can understand the annoyance with an odd number of case-ports given the fact that Mainboard-Connecters are always provided for pairs of ports, but still I would guess that for at least 80% of potential customers this fact is completely irrelevant.
  • Hrel - Tuesday, January 29, 2013 - link

    I transfer data from one external to another, via USB 3.0. 2 Ports is a bare minimum.

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